The World Economic Forum (WEF) has positioned itself as one of the most, if not the most, powerful entities on the planet.
Since it was founded by German economist Klaus Schwab fifty years ago, the WEF has gained more and more prominence over the decades.
The globalist international organization has become one of the leading platforms of futuristic thinking and planning.
As a meeting place of the global elite, the WEF brings together the leaders in business and politics along with a few selected intellectuals.
The main thrust of the forum is global control.
Free markets and individual choice do not stand as the top values, but state interventionism and collectivism.
Individual liberty and private property are to disappear from this planet by 2030, according to the projections and scenarios coming from the WEF.
Eight Predictions
Individual liberty is at risk again.
What may lie ahead was projected in November 2016 when the WEF published “8 Predictions for the World in 2030.”
According to the WEF’s scenario, the world will become quite a different place from now because how people work and live will undergo a profound change.
The scenario for the world in 2030 is more than just a forecast.
It is a plan whose implementation has accelerated drastically since with the announcement of the pandemic and the consequent lockdowns.
According to the projections of the WEF’s “Global Future Councils,” private property and privacy will be abolished during the next decade.
The coming expropriation would go further than even the communist demand to abolish the property of production goods but leave space for private possessions.
The WEF projection says that consumer goods, too, would be no longer private property.
If the WEF projection should come true, people would have to rent and borrow their necessities from the state, which would be the sole proprietor of all goods.
The supply of goods would be rationed in line with a social credit points system.
Shopping in the traditional sense would disappear along with the private purchases of goods.
Every personal move would be tracked electronically, and all production would be subject to the requirements of clean energy and a sustainable environment.
In order to attain “sustainable agriculture,” the food supply will be mainly vegetarian.
In the new totalitarian service economy, the government will provide basic accommodation, food, and transport, while the rest must be lent from the state.
The use of natural resources will be brought down to the absolute minimum.
In cooperation with a few key countries, a global agency would set the price of CO2 emissions at an extremely high level to disincentivize its use.
In a promotional video, the WEF summarizes the eight predictions in the following statements:
- People will own nothing. Goods are either free of charge or must be lent from the state.
- The United States will no longer be the leading superpower, but a handful of countries will dominate.
- Organs will not be transplanted but printed.
- Meat consumption will be minimized.
- Massive displacement of people will take place with billions of refugees.
- To limit the emission of carbon dioxide, a global price will be set at an exorbitant level.
- People can prepare to go to Mars and start a journey to find alien life.
- Western values will be tested to the breaking point.
Beyond Privacy and Property
In a publication for the World Economic Forum, the Danish ecoactivist Ida Auken, who served as her country’s minister of the environment from 2011 to 2014 and still is a member of the Danish Parliament (the Folketing), has elaborated a scenario of a world without privacy or property.
In “Welcome to 2030,” she envisions a world where “I own nothing, have no privacy, and life has never been better.”
By 2030, so says her scenario, shopping and owning have become obsolete, because everything that once was a product is now a service.
In this idyllic new world of hers, people have free access to transportation, accommodation, food, “and all the things we need in our daily lives.”
As these things will become free of charge, “it ended up not making sense for us to own much.”
There would be no private ownership in houses nor would anyone pay rent, “because someone else is using our free space whenever we do not need it.”
A person’s living room, for example, will be used for business meetings when one is absent.
Concerns like “lifestyle diseases, climate change, the refugee crisis, environmental degradation, completely congested cities, water pollution, air pollution, social unrest and unemployment” are things of the past.
The author predicts that people will be happy to enjoy such a good life that is so much better “than the path we were on, where it became so clear that we could not continue with the same model of growth.”
Ecological Paradise
In her 2019 contribution to the Annual Meeting of the Global Future Councils of the World Economic Forum, Ida Auken foretells how the world may look in the future “if we win the war on climate change.”
By 2030, when CO2 emissions will be greatly reduced, people will live in a world where meat on the dinner plate “will be a rare sight” while water and the air will be much cleaner than today.
Because of the shift from buying goods to using services, the need to have money will vanish, because people will spend less and less on goods. Work time will shrink and leisure time will grow.
For the future, Auken envisions a city where electric cars have substituted conventional combustion vehicles.
Most of the roads and parking spaces will have become green parks and walking zones for pedestrians.
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